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Rep. Eric Cantor [R-VA7]
U.S. Representative, Virginia’s 7th District

Photo of Cantor
State:Virginia [map]
District:7th Congressional District [map]
Party:Republican
Birthday:Jun 6, 1963 / 46 years old

To contact Eric Cantor, visit his official website. (Read our tips for communicating with Congress.) See the Project Vote Smart page for Cantor for more biographical and issue information.

Cantor’s latest tweet:RT @christinakb @EricCantor Raising taxes in an econ slump has NEVER worked. Why on earth would it work now? #tcot #gop.(Feb 3, 2010)
Official YouTube Feed
“Republican Whip Eric Cantor discusses the President's health care summit on Fox News' Happening Now” - Feb 9, 2010 5:36 PM. Watch Video.
On the Floor
Latest Floor Video from MetaVid

Congressional Service

Eric Cantor has represented Virginia’s 7th congressional district since 2001.

Below are the past and present terms in the Senate, House, and White House held by Eric Cantor:

WhenRoleRepresenting
2001-2010
U.S. RepresentativeVirginia’s 7th
(was preceeded by Tom Bliley)

Sponsorship Analysis

"Ideometer"Cantor is a rank-and-file Republican according to GovTrack's own analysis of bill sponsorship.

These labels come from the Political Spectrum statistical analysis that we have carried out. The statistical analysis puts members of Congress on a scale based on patterns of bill sponsorship, and is blind to party affiliation and the content of bills. From there, we have somewhat arbitrarily divided the Members of Congress into far-left/right, rank-and-file, and moderate (i.e. centrist). For each party, the most extreme 23% of Members of Congress are labeled far-left or -right. The most centrist 30% (i.e. those closest to the other party) are labeled moderate. The remaining 47% are labeled as rank-and-file.

"Leader-Follower Score"
Cantor is a follower according to our statistical analysis of bills in this legislative session. Cantor tends to cosponsors the bills of other Members of Congress who do not cosponsor Cantor’s own bills. For more, see congressional statistics.

To compute the leader-follower score for Cantor, we make a table that lists all other Members of Congress. Each row has the number bills sponsored by Cantor and cosponsored by the other Member of Congress divided by the number of bills sponsored by the other Member of Congress and cosponsored by Cantor.

This is a measure of who is following who. The higher the number, the more times others are cosponsoring Cantor's bills without Cantor returning the favor. We then take the mean of (the logorithms of) these ratios. Thanks to Joe Barillari for the idea.

Voting Record

Voting RecordEric Cantor missed 188 (3%) of 6346 votes since Jan 3, 2001. The graph to the left shows the number of missed votes over time. Click for a larger chart and a list of recent votes.

Money & Influence

The top campaign contribution to Cantor in 2007-2008 was $38,800 from employees of NVR Inc. Eric Cantor’s net worth was between $2,182,171 and $7,106,000 in 2007, according to Cantor’s mandated financial disclosure statements. For more information, see the Center for Responsive Politics’ page for Cantor.

Committee Membership

Eric Cantor sits on the following committees:

Bill Sponsorship & Cosponsorship

Eric Cantor has sponsored 39 bills since Jan 3, 2001 of which 34 haven't made it out of committee and 2 were successfully enacted. Cantor has co-sponsored 810 bills during the same time period. (The count of enacted bills considers only bills actually sponsored by Cantor and companion bills identified by CRS that were themselves enacted, but not if they were incorporated into other bills, as that information is not readily available.)

Some of Cantor’s most recently sponsored bills include...

H.R. 4133: To amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to exempt public school rehabilitation from the tax-exempt use exception to the rehabilitation credit.
H.R. 2854: Liberty Bill Act
H.R. 3324: Stable Future for Veterans' Children Act
H.R. 4578: To amend title 23, United States Code, to allow vehicles operated by members of the Armed Forces (including reserve components thereof) serving on active duty and vehicles operated by law enforcement officials to use high occupancy vehicle facilities, and for other purposes.
H.R. 1903: Responsible Homeowners Act of 2009

View All... (including bills from previous years)

Photo from the Congressional Pictorial Directory.